5 Books That Make Us Love This Planet Even More

Learning all about our wonderful, fascinating world is a walk in the park — literally, if you take one of these listens outdoors with you.By Kara CutruzzulaApr 19, 2017 10:06 AM

Happy 4.5 billionth Earth Day, everybody! Just how long would it take to listen to an entire, comprehensive history of the planet? (Answer: There isn’t an ‘X’ speed fast enough.) But it is possible to chip away at the mysteries and history of our great big green-blue swirling marble in the sky. Just break down the Earth into simpler parts — plants, animals, and environment — and dig a little into each one.

Earth Day seems like the perfect opportunity to do that. The annual event started April 22, 1970 to increase public awareness about environmental concerns and soon led to the foundation of the Environmental Protection Agency and instrumental policy changes. It’s now celebrated around the globe.

This year’s occasion made me wonder just how much I actually knew about our planet. My bold admission is … not much. And so, in a small ode to Drake, I started from the bottom and began to explore the deep blue sea.

My only knowledge of sponges comes from a 22-year-oldSeinfeld episode, and although I’m no marine biologist, I don’t believe Peter Godfrey-Smithis talking about the same kind of sponge in his book Other Minds, which explores the consciousness of cephalopods from a philosophical context — beginning by tracing the history of evolution all the way back to, you guessed it, sponges.

Who can walk the streets of New York the same way after learning that rats like to be tickled?

“The octopus is the closest we will come to meeting an intelligent alien,” he writes in his insightful and moving book, and I picture, on some distant planet, an alien shedding a single tear.

Science writer Virginia Morell also dives into the inner world of animals with her book Animal Wise, calling the animal mind “one of the most forbidden realms on Earth.” She makes short work of illuminating and classifying animal traits that are wholly unique and surprising. Cows, apparently, have regional accents. Who can walk the streets of New York the same way after learning that rats like to be tickled?

Meanwhile, The World Without Us by Alan Weisman poses the question: What would happen to the world if humans disappeared? Would the flora and fauna rejoice — “heave a huge biological sigh of relief,” as Weisman writes — or would the world actually miss us?

In one engrossing chapter, he describes with rich detail how exactly (and how fast) the New York subways would become flooded and erode the city; how the asphalt jungles would give way to real ones ruled by megafauna, those large mammals weighing over 100 pounds, which would quickly become kings. This book, with its rigorous research and image-rich writing, is music to the ears of anyone wishing someone would tell them our planetary harm is reversible. (Spoiler alert: It mostly is, but it will take a lot of time, and humans have to go away first.)

“But if your attention strays for a second, when you look back there will be an octopus quietly crawling across the floor.”

Learning about a possible homo sapiens deficient endgame is perhaps the fastest cure for “nature deficit disorder,” an apt term for humans not taking advantage of their surroundings discussed in The Nature Fix.

Symptoms of NDD include dull skin and a vitamin D deficiency. The cure is to gather all your strength and … walk outside. Because according to Nature Fix author Florence Williams, nature makes us happier, healthier, more creative and empathetic. “Nature, it turns out, is good for civilization,” she writes. Our surroundings play a huge role in cultivating happiness — Williams herself was depressed and disoriented after moving from an idyllic small mountain city to Washington D.C., realizing that, indeed, you don’t know what you’ve got ‘til it’s gone.

But oh, this book was a spark of inspiration! Hearing about the benefits of going outdoors made me embarrassed to share that my step count on certain days hovers in the double digits, and while my local park can’t compete with South Korea’s popular Jangseong Healing Forest featuring two-and-a-half million cypress trees, its few good magnolias provide a similar restorative benefit. And so, to pre-emptively celebrate Earth Day, I took myself for a simple walk. And it was lovely.

Cue up one of these thought-provoking titles, go outside, and observe what just might be the greatest show on Earth.